On September 21, 2009, Northwestern University announced three changes to the journal. First, rather than continue under the aegis of
Northwestern University Press with paid, professional editors, the journal would become a student-edited publication in 2010. Second, the print edition would cease and the journal would become digital only. Third, the journal would move from the press to the Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing program (part of Northwestern University's Department of English). The first online edition of
TriQuarterly Online, Issue 138, continuing the numbered issue sequence to show continuity from the print edition, launched on July 5, 2010 at the website: Triquarterly.org. The journal is currently housed in the English Department and operates under the aegis of the Litowitz MFA+MA Graduate Program in Creative Writing and English. Periodicals as varied at the
Chronicle of Higher Education and
The New Yorker expressed the displeasure of the literary world at the change. One writer described the literary community as "surprised, saddened, shocked" by the change as well as "dismayed" that the journal's editor and associate editor would not be included in the move. Jeffrey Lependorf, executive director of the Council of Literary Magazine and Presses, said the change "doesn’t feel like the passing of the torch; it feels like the extinguishing of the flame.” Another wrote that it highlighted "a harrowing trend in publishing and in academia: the replacement of experienced, paid professionals with under- (or un-) paid casual labor—whether bloggers, graduate students, or adjuncts who often receive neither benefits nor job security." . After the university reassigned
TriQuarterly journal to the Department of English,
Northwestern University Press continued to acquire and publish books in the TriQuarterly imprint, which is edited by
Parneshia Jones. ==Influence==